Dear friends,
Happy New Year! The Senate started 2021 off with a busy end to the 101st General Assembly.
We passed sweeping reforms to address inequalities in education, economic opportunity and the criminal justice system.
We also passed measures to help businesses stay afloat during the ongoing pandemic and give CPS teachers the same bargaining rights as all other teachers in the state.
A brief overview of these measures is below.
If you have any questions, please reach out to my district office at (708) 848-2002 or send me an email at donharmon.org.
Sincerely,
Senator Don Harmon
Senate President, 39th District
The education pillar of the Illinois Legislative Black Caucus’ agenda addresses systemic racism and the reality that many children never get a fair chance at a quality education. The measure allocates resources to children whose lives may already be shaped by trauma by the time they start kindergarten and will require a real examination of the way biases influence our school systems and curriculums.
The bill also:
House Bill 2275 allows Chicago teachers to collectively bargain over issues like class size, length of school year and staff reductions.
All other teachers in the state are already allowed to bargain over these items. This legislation simply gives Chicago teachers parity.
Businesses are struggling to survive as the state has imposed necessary mitigation measures to slow the spread of COVID-19. Many have turned to curbside pickup and delivery, but there was not a statewide standard for alcohol delivery, limiting some establishments’ ability to conduct business.
Senate Bill 54 allows retail establishments to use third party delivery services like Instacart to deliver alcohol along with other items like groceries.
The economic development pillar of the Illinois Legislative Black Caucus’ agenda addresses disparities faced by communities of color.
It is divided into four pieces of legislation that address different issues:
Click here for more details.
This comprehensive criminal justice reform bill makes significant reforms in the areas of police training in everything from crisis intervention tactics to de-escalation, police accountability, transparency in law enforcement and the rights of detainees and prisoners.
Spurred by the deaths of George Floyd, Breonna Taylor and other Black Americans at the hands of police, it is the culmination of nine public hearings over four months with over 30 hours of public testimony and many more hours of stakeholder meetings and negotiations.
What the bill does:
What it does NOT do: